The split keyboard part is incredible for ergonomics. So comfy to just put your hands on my desk at shoulder width and just have my keyboard right there. The trackball I sold, though, came back to a Deathadder… How scary am I?
If I go down that route of ergonomic controls and weird keyboards and such I’m eventually going to build myself this whole HOTAS cockpit with controls at the ends of the armrests, foot pedals, the works. I’ll need some bedsore cream.
I went down the ergonomics route from sheer necessity more than anything. I have ulnar nerve issues in both elbows, meaning my hands and fingers end up tingling, then hurting for days if I’m not careful. I have pretty broad shoulders (used to play on the offensive line in american football) and very large hands, meaning “regular” non-split keyboards inherently create a lot of tension in my wrists and elbows due to the sheer angle I have to maintain. I use a split board just so I can reduce wrist pronation by keeping my arms at shoulder width and having some tenting.
However, I have to say, “large” split boards, like this one or my Iris l, aren’t nearly as weird to use as they look. For the most part, until you have some fancy mappings going on, all that’s different by default is having some modifiers and common special keys right under your thumbs instead of weak fingers or positions (pinkies or having to reach under your palm). Those tiny 3-4 row boards that need 3-4 layers just to be usable are IMHO another game entirely haha.
I type on a more or less standard QWERTY keyboard (a Cooler Master MasterKeys Pro M; an interesting board because instead of eliminating the numpad, it eliminates the arrow keys in a very clever way). I’m not a particularly big guy so standard key spacing is fine for me. I do touch type in a very classroom keyboarding class kind of way so I’ve thankfully avoided any repetitive stress injuries thusfar.
Sometimes I think I’d be interested in a split keyboard especially if it could combine my thumb ball mouse in the right side so I didn’t have to move my hand around as much but meh.
I’ve never even considered “ergonomics” unless I’m playing video games like every hour of the day which only happened when I first discovered Deep Rock Galactic. Maybe I got lucky genetics? Whats it like for you?
I answered to another comment with some details, but long story short, it tends to be the kind of thing you don’t think about until it’s causing you problems in the first place. I never thought about any of this either until the pain started ~8 years ago. I have nerve pain in both elbows that shoot down to my ring finger and pinky, and up to the shoulder if it gets really bad - that is, if I’m not careful, like typing scrunched over a laptop in a meeting room all day… Using a split keyboard alone fixed like 90% of the problem, the rest is controlled with stretches and PT exercises, minding my posture, taking breaks, etc.
People who use setups like this scare me
The split keyboard part is incredible for ergonomics. So comfy to just put your hands on my desk at shoulder width and just have my keyboard right there. The trackball I sold, though, came back to a Deathadder… How scary am I?
If I go down that route of ergonomic controls and weird keyboards and such I’m eventually going to build myself this whole HOTAS cockpit with controls at the ends of the armrests, foot pedals, the works. I’ll need some bedsore cream.
I feel like this is where the rabbit hole will end up taking me
This is a setup btw, it’s not a real plane. https://youtu.be/xRaiCEzDFKA?si=3V6-XwBzyq_DChov
I went down the ergonomics route from sheer necessity more than anything. I have ulnar nerve issues in both elbows, meaning my hands and fingers end up tingling, then hurting for days if I’m not careful. I have pretty broad shoulders (used to play on the offensive line in american football) and very large hands, meaning “regular” non-split keyboards inherently create a lot of tension in my wrists and elbows due to the sheer angle I have to maintain. I use a split board just so I can reduce wrist pronation by keeping my arms at shoulder width and having some tenting.
However, I have to say, “large” split boards, like this one or my Iris l, aren’t nearly as weird to use as they look. For the most part, until you have some fancy mappings going on, all that’s different by default is having some modifiers and common special keys right under your thumbs instead of weak fingers or positions (pinkies or having to reach under your palm). Those tiny 3-4 row boards that need 3-4 layers just to be usable are IMHO another game entirely haha.
I type on a more or less standard QWERTY keyboard (a Cooler Master MasterKeys Pro M; an interesting board because instead of eliminating the numpad, it eliminates the arrow keys in a very clever way). I’m not a particularly big guy so standard key spacing is fine for me. I do touch type in a very classroom keyboarding class kind of way so I’ve thankfully avoided any repetitive stress injuries thusfar.
Sometimes I think I’d be interested in a split keyboard especially if it could combine my thumb ball mouse in the right side so I didn’t have to move my hand around as much but meh.
I’ve never even considered “ergonomics” unless I’m playing video games like every hour of the day which only happened when I first discovered Deep Rock Galactic. Maybe I got lucky genetics? Whats it like for you?
I answered to another comment with some details, but long story short, it tends to be the kind of thing you don’t think about until it’s causing you problems in the first place. I never thought about any of this either until the pain started ~8 years ago. I have nerve pain in both elbows that shoot down to my ring finger and pinky, and up to the shoulder if it gets really bad - that is, if I’m not careful, like typing scrunched over a laptop in a meeting room all day… Using a split keyboard alone fixed like 90% of the problem, the rest is controlled with stretches and PT exercises, minding my posture, taking breaks, etc.
Not scary at all.
No trackball for me, but I use a vertical mouse and have my Glove80 mapped to a Colemak layout, so it probably balances out.